- Sacbe
Sacbe, plural Sacbeob, (
Yucatec Maya : singular "sakbej", plural "sakbejo'ob") or "white ways" are raised pavedroad s built by theMaya civilization ofpre-Columbian Mesoamerica . Most connect temples, plazas, and groups of structures within ceremonial centers or cities, but some longer roads between cities are also known. The term "sacbe" is Yucatec Maya for "white road"; white because they were originally coated with limestonestucco , which was over stone and rubble fill.Many sacbeob can be seen by modern visitors to Maya sites; perhaps the most familiar is the one in
Chichen Itza running from the main group around El Castillo to theSacred Cenote , which is traveled on by thousands of tourists daily. Few of the longer roads still exist in their entirety. A well known sacbe connectsUxmal with Kabah, which is marked bycorbel arch es at either end. The 62 mile (100km) long road connecting the ancient cities ofCoba andYaxuna was for decades the longest known to archaeologists. The remains of an even longer route have recently received the attention of archaeologists. This long sacbe apparently ran from the site of Ti'ho (modernMérida, Yucatán ), through such sites asAke andIzamal , to theCaribbean Sea near modernPuerto Morelos , a total distance of some 300 km.While the longer roads could be used for trade and communication, all sacbeob apparently had ritual or religious significance as well. Travel writer and early
Mayanist John Lloyd Stephens reported that some localMaya people inYucatán still said a short ritualprayer when crossing a sacbe in the early 1840s, even though they had been overgrown with jungle for centuries at the time.While the sacbeob in the Yucatán are the best known, they are documented throughout the Maya area. Some appear to have been built as early in Maya history as the Pre-Classic; a number have been found around
El Mirador .In modern times, some of the ancient sacbeob have been used as bases or incorporated into modern highways and railway lines.
External links
* [http://www.famsi.org/reports/98027/section01.htm The Mérida to coast sacbe]
* [http://www.mesoweb.com/publications/CAA/09_text.html Causeways of Yucatan] Reed college web site with Kabah and Labná sacbes. http://academic.reed.edu/uxmal/contents.html
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